| Article: |
Tired of Inkjet Snapshots? The Canon CP-220 to the Rescue | |
| Subject: | Epson PictureMate | |
| Date: | 2004-12-21 13:08:24 | |
| From: | pvonk | |
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Response to: Epson PictureMate
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| Isn't the picturemate an ink jet printer? If so, the issue is how long a printed picture lasts. Ink jet pics don't have a long shelf life as I understand it. The Canon CP220 is a dye sub printer, which creates long-lasting pics. Dye sub pics cost more to produce, though, but a photo zealot like my wife demands something more than ink jet output. | ||
Showing messages 1 through 3 of 3.
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Epson PictureMate
2004-12-26 23:07:24 jonblock [Reply | View]
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Epson PictureMate
2005-12-30 16:22:15 Bruce Stewart |
[Reply | View]
Thanks for the PictureMate OS X details you provided here. I've been pounding my head against the wall trying to get mine to work correctly with my OS X machine the past few days, and I had missed the crucial Page Setup option which you detailed above.
Thanks! -
Epson PictureMate
2006-02-12 21:03:58 pesco [Reply | View]
Thanks for the info! Unfortunately, we're still having problems. We followed your directions in iPhoto (borderless, full page) but still have 1/4" borders on the short sides of the photo prints. It's almost like the aspect ratio of the photos that come out of my Casio Exilim is different than that of a 4x6 piece of paper. Very strange. Any thoughts? Thanks!




As for the question of archival quality, Epson has been touting their long-lasting (100 years?) ink+paper combination for a few years now. I doubt I'll remember this discussion in 100 years, so I can't confirm it based on personal experience, but I assume someone would have cried foul if their claims were far off base. I doubt they'd stand up well to the pour-water-on-them test Derrick mentioned, though.
Getting the prints to fit properly was not a particular problem, once I figured out the separate steps of informing iPhoto (and later Photoshop) of the paper size I wanted (4x6 borderless, in page setup) as well as informing the printer of the paper size I wanted (full page, in the print dialog box). I do think the whole Print system in OS X has room for improvement, though.
One warning: At least in my experience so far, printing immediately to this printer tended to result in failures (printer unavailable/jobs on hold/whatever). I think the system starts spooling to the machine before the entire print job has been received from the application, then runs out of data and something chokes. I worked around this easily enough by printing on Hold and then releasing the job when it was fully spooled. Scheduled printing (i.e. print this 5 minutes from now) also works.